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Monday, January 14, 2019

English Doc

Heda Margolius Kovaly who wrote Under a Cruel headliner writes just about her horrible, suffering and tragedy life she endured first in the Nazi communist rule in her citizen Czechoslovakianoslovakia. She was born in Prague to a Judaic family. She was young at the m when the Ger troopsy another(prenominal) attacked Czechoslovakia during the World warfare II. Heda was in meanness camps during the World War II she escaped from the Nazi, she hardly survived, solely her family died. At the end of the war she returned to Prague and took part in uprising against the Germany in whitethorn 1945, she got married to an old friend, named Rudolf Margolius who is Jewish too.I will be writing about how Heda Kovaly suffered under the Nazism and had high hope for communism, how she view granting immunity and how it spayd after her life changed too. Moreover, how Rudolf trial changed her life. Heda suffered a lot to escape from the camps, but her insists and rent to be free were more pow erful than her fear of dead. People a lot ask me How did you manage? To survive the camps To escape Everyone assumes it is easy to die but that the struggle to live requires a superhuman effort. Mostly it is the other modality around. There is, perhaps, nothing harder than waiting passively for death.Staying alive is simple and earthy and does not require any particular resolve. (16). Towards the end of the war, Heda managed to escape from a death march to Bergen-Belsen and get to Prague. She fought for her personal granting immunity, but freedom billet changed when she escaped from Nazi concentration then by joining the communist party thinking Friends were too scared of the punishments they would face if they helped her and she was wandered around the metropolis for days trying to avoid arrest. After the end of World War II was ended the soviets had taken over Czechoslovakia Kovaly meaning of freedom change as her life changes.She united with her beloved Rudolph who got marri ed and had son. They were struggling to muster a house after they were sent to camps. At the end they were precondition a small apartment. Kovaly explains although we continually hoped for freedom, our concept of freedom changed. (60). Her concept of freedom before imprisonment was that it was natural and self evident. By the end of their time in the camps, many prisoners came to accept the view that freedom is something that has to be acquire and fought for, a privilege that is awarded, like a medal. (60-61). She clarified how it was impossible for the Czech people not to become somewhat twisted. Kovaly had fought for her personal freedom when she had escaped. From her experience and the problems she faced while she was escaping the camp, made her well aware of the authorities around her. She was very intelligent and had her own opinion and she acknowledged the event that Our democracy had allowed the growth of the fascist and Nazi parties which in the end undone it (57).Sh e clarified that people were willing to work extremely hard to procure their goal, that they want to rebuild the world. She always mentions how hard her husband worked to the party and many innocent people were thrown in jail. Hedas life was divergent from all the other people in Czechoslovakia, because she was married to a man who was enrolled in the government administration. She had a unique point of view into the communist working government because her husband was a deputy minister in Czechoslovakian government. That helped Heda a lot to see the hypocrisies

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